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Deletion of Gba in neurons, but not microglia, causes neurodegeneration in a Gaucher mouse model
Hannah B.D. Duffy, … , Frances M. Platt, Richard L. Proia
Hannah B.D. Duffy, … , Frances M. Platt, Richard L. Proia
Published September 23, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(21):e179126. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.179126.
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Research Article Genetics Neuroscience

Deletion of Gba in neurons, but not microglia, causes neurodegeneration in a Gaucher mouse model

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Abstract

Gaucher disease, the most prevalent lysosomal storage disease, is caused by homozygous mutations at the GBA gene, which is responsible for encoding the enzyme glucocerebrosidase. Neuronopathic Gaucher disease is associated with microgliosis, astrogliosis, and neurodegeneration. However, the role that microglia, astrocytes, and neurons play in the disease remains to be determined. In the current study, we developed inducible, cell-type-specific Gba-KO mice to better understand the individual impacts of Gba deficiencies on microglia and neurons. Gba was conditionally knocked out either exclusively in microglia or neurons or throughout the body. These mouse models were developed using a tamoxifen-inducible Cre system, with tamoxifen administration commencing at weaning. Microglia-specific Gba-KO mice showed no signs of disease. However, the neuron-specific Gba KO resulted in a shortened lifespan, severe weight loss, and ataxia. These mice also had significant neurodegeneration, microgliosis, and astrogliosis accompanied by the accumulation of glucosylceramide and glucosylsphingosine, recapitulating Gaucher disease–like symptoms. These surprising findings reveal that, unlike the neuron-specific Gba deficiency, microglia-specific Gba deficiency alone does not induce disease. The neuronal Gaucher disease mouse model, with a median survival of 16 weeks, may be useful for future studies of pathogenesis and the evaluation of therapies.

Authors

Hannah B.D. Duffy, Colleen Byrnes, Hongling Zhu, Galina Tuymetova, Y. Terry Lee, Frances M. Platt, Richard L. Proia

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Figure 2

Verification of the cell specificity of the microglia-specific Gba-KO mouse.

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Verification of the cell specificity of the microglia-specific Gba-KO mo...
Tmem119-Cre mice were crossed with tdTomato reporter mice. Tmem119-Cre drives the specific expression of tdTomato in microglia (Iba1 labeled) but not in neurons (NeuN labeled), oligodendrocytes (Olig2 labeled), or astrocytes (GFAP labeled). All images (other than tile scans) are from the cortex. Scale bars: 1 mm (tile scan); 20 μm (bottom 3 rows). n = 3.

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